Vol. 11, Issue 8, 1434-1440, August 2001
RESOURCES
A Marker-Dense Physical Map of the Bradyrhizobium japonicum Genome
Jeffrey P.
Tomkins,1,4
Todd C.
Wood,1
Minviluz G.
Stacey,2
John T.
Loh,2
Adam
Judd,3
Jose L.
Goicoechea,1
Gary
Stacey,2
Michael J.
Sadowsky,3 and
Rod A.
Wing1
1 Clemson University Genomics Institute, Clemson, South
Carolina 29634, USA; 2 Center for Legume Research, Department
of Microbiology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee 37996, USA; 3 Department of Soil, Water and Climate, Biological
Process Institute and Center for Microbial and Plant Genomics,
University of Minnesota, St. Paul, Minnesota 55113, USA
Bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones are effective mapping
and sequencing reagents for use with a wide variety of small and large
genomes. This report describes the development of a physical framework
for the genome of Bradyrhizobium japonicum, the
nitrogen-fixing symbiont of soybean. A BAC library for B. japonicum was constructed that provides a 77-fold genome coverage based on an estimated genome size of 8.7 Mb. The library contains 4608 clones with an average insert size of 146 kb. To generate a physical
map, the entire library was fingerprinted with HindIII, and
the fingerprinted clones were assembled into contigs using the
Fingerprint Contig software (FPC; Sanger Centre, UK). The FPC analysis placed 3410 clones in six large contigs. The ends of 1152 BAC inserts were sequenced to generate
a sequence-tagged connector (STC) framework. To join and orient the
contigs, high-density BAC colony filters were probed with 41 known gene
probes and 17 end sequences from contig boundaries. STC sequences were
searched against the public databases using FASTA and
BLASTX algorithms. Query results allowed the
identification of 113 high probability matches with putative functional
identities that were placed on the physical map. Combined with the
hybridization data, a high-resolution physical map with 194 positioned
markers represented in two large contigs was developed, providing a
marker every 45 kb. Of these markers, 177 are known or putative B. japonicum genes. Additionally, 1338 significant BLASTX
results (E < 10
4) were manually sorted by
function to produce a functionally categorized database of relevant
B. japonicum STC sequences that can also be traced to specific
locations in the physical map.
4
Corresponding author.
11:1434-1440 ©2001 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/01 $5.00